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Lost Horizon

  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 2h 12m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
15K
YOUR RATING
Ronald Colman in Lost Horizon (1937)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:59
1 Video
78 Photos
Mountain AdventureQuestAdventureDramaFantasyMystery

When a revered diplomat's plane is diverted and crashes in the peaks of Tibet, he and the other survivors are guided to an isolated monastery at Shangri-La, where they wrestle with the invit... Read allWhen a revered diplomat's plane is diverted and crashes in the peaks of Tibet, he and the other survivors are guided to an isolated monastery at Shangri-La, where they wrestle with the invitation to stay.When a revered diplomat's plane is diverted and crashes in the peaks of Tibet, he and the other survivors are guided to an isolated monastery at Shangri-La, where they wrestle with the invitation to stay.

  • Director
    • Frank Capra
  • Writers
    • Robert Riskin
    • James Hilton
    • Sidney Buchman
  • Stars
    • Ronald Colman
    • Jane Wyatt
    • Edward Everett Horton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frank Capra
    • Writers
      • Robert Riskin
      • James Hilton
      • Sidney Buchman
    • Stars
      • Ronald Colman
      • Jane Wyatt
      • Edward Everett Horton
    • 174User reviews
    • 47Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 6 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Lost Horizon
    Trailer 1:59
    Lost Horizon

    Photos78

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    Top cast67

    Edit
    Ronald Colman
    Ronald Colman
    • Robert Conway
    Jane Wyatt
    Jane Wyatt
    • Sondra
    Edward Everett Horton
    Edward Everett Horton
    • Lovett
    John Howard
    John Howard
    • George Conway
    Thomas Mitchell
    Thomas Mitchell
    • Barnard
    Margo
    Margo
    • Maria
    Isabel Jewell
    Isabel Jewell
    • Gloria
    H.B. Warner
    H.B. Warner
    • Chang
    Sam Jaffe
    Sam Jaffe
    • High Lama
    Norman Ainsley
    • Embassy Club Steward
    • (uncredited)
    Chief John Big Tree
    Chief John Big Tree
    • Porter
    • (uncredited)
    Wyrley Birch
    Wyrley Birch
    • Missionary
    • (uncredited)
    Beatrice Blinn
    Beatrice Blinn
    • Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Hugh Buckler
    • Lord Gainsford
    • (uncredited)
    Sonny Bupp
    Sonny Bupp
    • Boy Being Carried to Plane
    • (unconfirmed)
    • (uncredited)
    John Burton
    • Wynant
    • (uncredited)
    Tom Campbell
    • Porter
    • (uncredited)
    Matthew Carlton
    • Pottery Maker
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Frank Capra
    • Writers
      • Robert Riskin
      • James Hilton
      • Sidney Buchman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews174

    7.615.3K
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    Featured reviews

    9Steffi_P

    "The other side of the hill"

    The second half of the 1930s saw the return of the big picture - bigger budgets, grander ideas, longer runtimes in which to tell a story. But the 30s were also a decade of highly emotional and humanist cinema, fuelled by the hardships of the great depression. Lost Horizon sees what was for the time a rare marriage between burgeoning picture scope, in what was "poverty row" studio Columbia's most expensive production to date, and poignant intimacy in the source novel by James Hilton.

    Thank goodness for director Frank Capra, who seemed really able to balance this sort of thing. Capra could be a great showman, composing those beautiful iconic shots to show the magnificent Stephen Goosson art direction off to best advantage. But he also knows how to bring out a touching human story. In some places Capra's camera seems a trifle distant, and is almost voyeuristic as it peeps out through foliage or looming props. But rather than separate us from the people it is done in such a way as to give a kind of respectful distance at times of profound emotion, for example when Ronald Colman comes out of his first meeting with the High Lama. The camera hangs back, just allowing Colman's body language to convey feelings. At other times Capra will go for the opposite tack, and hold someone in a lengthy close-up. In this way we are given to just one facet a character's emotional experience, and it becomes all the more intense for that.

    Of course such techniques would be nothing without a good cast. There couldn't really have been anyone better than Ronald Colman for the lead role. Now middle-aged, but still possessed with enough charm and presence to carry a movie, Colman has a slow subtlety to his movements which is nevertheless very expressive. His face, an honest smile but such sad eyes, seems to be filled with all that hope and longing that Lost Horizon is about. Sturdy character actors H.B. Warner and Thomas Mitchell give great support. It's unusual to see comedy player Edward Everett Horton in a drama like this, and comedy players in dramas could often be a sour note in 1930s pictures, but Horton is such a lovable figure and just about close enough to reality to pull it off. The only disappointing performance is that of John Howard, who is overwrought and hammy, but even this works in a way as it makes his antagonistic character seem to be the one who is out of place.

    Lost Horizon is indeed a wondrous picture, and one that fulfils its mission statement of being both sweeping and soul-stirring. It appears that Capra, always out for glory, was out to make his second Academy Award Best Picture. But history was to repeat itself. In 1933 he had had his first go at a potential Oscar-winner with The Bitter Tea of General Yen, only for that picture to be ignored and the more modest It Happened One Night to win the plaudits the following year. Lost Horizon won two technical Oscars, but bombed at the box office, but in 1938 the down-to-earth comedy drama You Can't Take it with You topped the box office and won Best Pic.

    Lost Horizon was in no way worthy of such a dismissal, and is indeed a bit better than You Can't Take it with You. It was perhaps more than anything a case of bad timing. Audiences were only just starting to get used to two-hour-plus runtimes, especially for movies with such unconventional themes. If you look at contemporary trailers and taglines, you can see it was being pitched as some kind of earth-shattering spectacular, whereas it is more in the nature of an epic drama. For later releases the movie was edited down to as little as 92 minutes. Fortunately, we now have a restored version. The additional material that has been reconstructed is vital for giving depth, not only to the characters, but also to the setting of Shangri-La itself. With hindsight, we can look back on Lost Horizon as a work of real cinematic beauty.
    8springfieldrental

    Frank Capra's Costly Pet Project

    After a string of highly profitable movies, director Frank Capra knew it was a perfect time to propose to the stingy Columbia Pictures' president Harry Cohn an expensive epic based on James Hilton's runaway 1933 novel best seller. After listening to Capra's pitch, Cohn was all in by financing February 1937 "Lost Horizon."

    Capra loved Hilton's epic, but bringing the complex tale about a group of Westerners who are brought to the secret kingdom of Shangri-La deep in the Himalaya Mountains was difficult to translate onto the screen. Cohn initially handed the director a working budget of $1.25 million to make his dream motion picture, a generous amount for one of Hollywood's smaller major film studios.

    Capra tasked his writing collaborator Robert Riskin to research the Tibetan culture, its people, architecture and clothing to prepare for the ambitious film. Building 65 sets, including those on the studio's Burbank ranch and inside the huge Los Angeles Ice and Cold Storage Warehouse, the construction alone ate up a great chunk of the movie's budget. Complications ballooned the already expensive production, including freezing temperatures in the cold warehouse studio causing the fragile film equipment to crack and shatter. Unanticipated delays totally ten months sent Capra's film crew to shoot Irene Dunne's 1936 "Theodora Goes Wild" before the director was ready to resume.

    Retired stage actor A. E. Anson was picked to play the High Lama. Capra telephoned the actor to inform him the part was his. A few hours later, Capra received a call stating that Anson, 56, upon hearing he was going to be the Lama, keeled over and died of a heart attack. Next in line was 58-year-old actor Henry B. Walthall, noted for his lead in D. W. Griffith's 1915 "Birth of a Nation." Just before filming began, he collapsed from an exhausting overloaded schedule on the Warner Brothers set making 1936's 'China Clipper' and died soon after. Capra then cast the youthful Sam Jaffe, 45, in only his third film, as the Lama.

    Unusual for Capra he filmed every conceivable angle of each scene, an expensive proposition. Cohn faced a roomful of reels of film that had to be edited down into a coherent movie. At first, Capra's rough cut was six hours, then a few more weeks of work sliced the film to a more manageable three hours. Cohn told his employees to postpone cashing their salary checks for a week since his finances were drying up from "Lost Horizon's" escalating costs. Finally, the studio head yanked Capra out of the editing room and had two editors finish the cutting. Capra took Cohn to court for breaking his contract that gave the director final approval. He claimed the studio wanted a shorter film for more daily theater showings to increase its box office take. Ironically, "Lost Horizon" won the Oscar for Best Editing.

    Music composer Dimitri Tiomkin, an aspiring concert pianist, gave up playing once he broke his arm and turned to Hollywood. He credits Capra for giving him his first job, launching a career as one cinema's more prolific scorers of musical sound tracks. The Russian-born Tiomkin earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Musical Score for the movie, and gained his United States citizenship right after its release.

    "Lost Horizon's" plot opens with diplomat Robert Conway (Ronald Colman) along with a handful of others, including his brother George (John Howard), fleeing a chaotic Chinese revolutionary battle. Unbeknowst to them they hop onto a plane piloted by a hired Shangri-La aviator to bring the diplomat to the remote city to replace the dying High Lama (Jaffe). Robert meets Sondra (Jane Wyatt), the Lama's confidant, who introduces him to all the wonderful things in her land. The highly-respected diplomat faces the difficult decision whether to return to Western civilization or stay in his new-found paradise. The movie is "an artistic tour de force," hailed The Hollywood Reporter, "in all ways, a triumph for Frank Capra." Modern film reviewer Patrick Nash wrote the film "is an epic in every sense of the word. It tells a wonderful story filled with adventure and majesty and it surely ranks among the greatest movies ever to come out of Hollywood's Golden Age."

    Unfortunately, "Lost Horizon" lost a pile of money on its initial release, and only recuperated its costs after several re-releases. Besides the Oscar win for Best Editing, it won for Best Art Design for its lavish Streamline Moderne art-deco sets of Shangri-La. The Capra film was nominated for Best Picture, Best Supporting actor (H. B. Warner as Chang), Best Original Score, Best Sound Mixing and Best Assistant Director. The American Film Institute nominated "Lost Horizon" for Best Movie, Best Film Score, and Top Ten Fantasy Film. Remarkably, Columbia Pictures revisited the Hilton book by making it into a 1973 musical "Lost Horizon," with Peter Finch and Liv Ullmann. It proved to be a financial disaster.
    9ilovedolby

    `Lost Horizon' is indeed a remnant from the golden age of cinema.

    There is an aura that seems to surround classic films made before the days of computer generated visual effects and intense marketing campaigns. It was a time when motion pictures depended on grand stories, superb performances, and great direction to catapult their success. This was exactly the case of `Lost Horizon,' a film from director Frank Copra (`It's A Wonderful Life'). With elaborate set designs, excellent performances by Ronald Colman, Jane Wyatt, John Howard, Thomas Mitchell, and Edward Everett Horton, `Lost Horizon' is a story of survival and ultimately finding a way home, that cannot be forgotten. `Lost Horizon' is a tale of five castaways who inadvertently find themselves in Shangri-La after their plane crashes in the mountains of Tibet. They are lead into the place of eternal youth, natural beauty, and free from strife by members of the region. They are treated as guests, and although they want to leave and find their way back to the world as they know it, porters are hard to find. It all leads to a notion that none of them want to admit; that they were meant to be in Shangri-La. Out of the thousands of movies that have been produced in the past 100 years, only a few afford of the privilege of remembrance. What's more, only a few seem to survive due to the nature of celluloid prints breaking down over time. A similar problem plagued `Lost Horizon,' in that after decades of worthy theatrical re-issues, the prints depreciated, with many withering away. As such, a preservation program was set in place to save copies of the film. Thanks to the works of countless individuals, this classic has been restored, to a certain degree, with some of the footage missing, replaced by still shots of the actors and recorded dialogue. From a critical standpoint, `Lost Horizon' has stood the test of time to be one of the greatest adventure classics ever produced by Hollywood. What is astonishing about this film is the attention to detail. As the film begins, a battle is taking place somewhere in China where we meet our protagonist, Bob Conway (Coleman). As the film continues, the scene changes to a scene on an airplane where our characters are trying to leave the war torn region. At one point, the crew is at a high altitude where the temperature is very cold. As such, we can see their breath in the shot as they speak. Normally, this kind of feature is ignored as the scene is short, but it adds a touch of realism that can't be denied. Incredible detail went into the creation of Shangri-La. With its large sets, beautiful costume design, the film takes on an epic proportion only rivaled by the grand designs of such Biblical epics as `Ben-Hur,' and `The Ten Commandments.' Truly, director Capra wanted to create an image that audiences would be astounded by…and he truly succeeded.

    One can't help but admire the characters-they are all a bit naïve, but all intriguing in their own ways. Conway (Coleman) is a British diplomat and explorer whose fame is well deserved. His brother, George (Howard) presents a great deal of fear for the unknown Shangri-La. The characters of Henry Barnard (Mitchell) and Alexander P. Lovett (Horton) add a real sense of humor to the film. There are some minor inconsistencies in the story and various tasks that the characters try to pull off, but it's hardly worth complaining about because the film is such a treasure among other films. After 66 years, `Lost Horizon' remains far better than most of the adventure films that play in cinemas nowadays. One can only wish that they could have been present to see this in a theater during its original run. How amazing it would have been to see this epic tale of survival and the human struggle against itself back in 1937. `Lost Horizon' is indeed a remnant from the golden age of cinema. ***1/2
    fred-83

    Pure movie magic of a rare kind

    I think I was about seven or eight years old when I first saw this film, and has always lingered in the back of my mind. This is pure movie magic of a rare kind, and it is surprising how well it holds up today. The story is handled with just the right balance of seriousness and humour, with fine performances throughout, and the timeless message it sends is truly profound. The middle part may be lacking a bit in pacing, but it is a minor quibble, since this, for my money, is a masterpiece. And it still looks great, with impressive set design and an abundance of atmosphere. The finale is simply sublime, and stays in the mind for a long time afterwards, one of my favorite movie moments of all time. A movie everyone should see.
    eibon04

    Maligned classic

    Fantasy filled film that shows the different facaets of human nature. Beautifully conceived by Frank Capra whose brilliant at making films with sentlemenity as main force. A masterpiece which was brutally cut during its threaitcal run and only recently has the film been somewhat restored. Thus, the complete version of Lost Horizon(1937) is one of many lost classics in history of film. Acting is excellent with everyone giving deep performances. An wonderful story with intriquing spirital symbolisms. Ronald Colman does a marvalous job as the good natured and tolerate Robert Conway. Personally I perfer Lost Horizons(1937) over Its a Wonderful Life(1946) because the main character in the former is more complex.

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    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The year after this film was released the owner of a prosperous theater chain hired an architect who designed a mansion that was inspired by the Shangri-La lamasery in this film. Located in Denver, Colorado, it still exists today.
    • Goofs
      Echoing the words of the critic, James Agate: 'The best film I've seen for ages, but will somebody please tell me how they got the grand piano along a footpath on which only one person can walk at a time with rope and pickaxe and with a sheer drop of three thousand feet or so?'
    • Quotes

      Chang: Age is a limit we impose upon ourselves. You know, each time you Westerners celebrate your birthday, you build another fence around your minds.

    • Crazy credits
      Bob Gitt of the UCLA Film & Television Archives claims the original opening sequence in 1937 had title cards "Conway has been sent to evacuate ninety white people before they're butchered in a local revolution" was changed in 1942 for a special reissue during WWII. The title cards read "before innocent Chinese people were butchered by Japanese hordes." This was to bolster propaganda against the Japanese.
    • Alternate versions
      Some of the music in the restored version is dubbed into different sections than the ones in the 118 minute cut version. For example, the moment in which Robert Conway ('Ronald Colman') discovers that the High Lama is really Father Perrault i accompanied by soft music in the cut version, while in the restored version this moment is played with no music.
    • Connections
      Edited from Storm Over Mont Blanc (1930)
    • Soundtracks
      Wiegenlied (Lullaby) Op. 49 No. 4
      (1868) (uncredited)

      Composed by Johannes Brahms

      English translator unknown

      Sung a cappella by children at Shangri-La

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    FAQ21

    • How long is Lost Horizon?Powered by Alexa
    • Why was Maria so anxious to leave Shangri La?
    • Why is Maria so anxious to leave Shangri La?
    • Is the version usually seen faithful to the director's intentions?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1, 1937 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Sony Pictures
    • Languages
      • English
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • Horizontes perdidos
    • Filming locations
      • Ojai, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 12m(132 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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